Above is just a few of the thousands upon thousands of unsold cars at Sheerness, United
Kingdom. Please do see this on
Google Maps....type
in Sheerness, United Kingdom. Look to
the west coast, below River Thames next to
River Medway. Left of A249, Brielle Way.

A local guy told me in an E-mail that the docks at Grimsby in the U.K
are also worth checking out.

Timestamp: Friday, May16th, 2014.

There are hundreds of places like this
in the world today and they keep on piling up. And why are they using
runways at disused airbases to park up thousands of cars if car sales
are normal? Nobody has satisfactorily answered that yet.

General Motors had an all time high of
815,000 unsold cars last month, 83 days supply just sitting there. This
rose to 826,000 to the end of April which equates as 85 days worth of
sales, gone unsold.

SURVEY

How many of you working class people,
reading this webpage, have bought a new car recently? Please do vote in
the Poll, Thank You. Already over 80% are saying they have not recently
bought a new car. Indeed the figures speak for themselves.

Houston...we have a
problem!...Nobody is buying brand new cars anymore! Well they are,
but not on the scale they once were.

Millions of brand new unsold
cars are just sitting redundant on runways and car parks around the
world. There, they stay, slowly deteriorating without being
maintained.

Below is an image of a
massive car park at Swindon, United Kingdom, with thousands upon
thousands of unsold cars just sitting there with not a buyer in sight.

The car manufacturers have to buy more and more land just to park their
cars as they perpetually roll off the production line.

There is proof that
the worlds recession is still biting and won't let go. All around
the world there are huge stockpiles of unsold cars and they are being
added to every day.

They have run out of space to park all of
these brand new unsold cars and are having to buy acres and acres of
land to store them.

NOTE:

The images on this
webpage showing all of these unsold cars are just a very small portion
of those around the world.

There are literally thousands of these
"car parks" rammed full of unsold cars in practically every country
on the planet.
Just in case you were wondering, these images have not been
Photoshopped, they are the real deal!

Its hard to
believe that there are so many unsold cars in the world but its
true. The worse part is that the amount of unsold cars are getting bigger every day.

It would be fair to
say that it is becoming a mechanical epidemic of epic proportions.

Below is shown just a
few of the 57,000 cars (and growing) that await delivery from their home
in the Port of Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.

When using Google Maps look South
of Broening Hwy in Dundalk for the massive expanse of space where all
these cars are parked up.

The car industry would never sell
these cars at massive reductions in their prices to get rid of them, no
they still want every buck. If they were to price these cars for a
couple of thousand they would sell them.

However, nobody would
then buy any expensive cars and then they would end up
being unsold. Its quite a pickle we have gotten ourselves into.

None of the images on this webpage are
of ordinary car parks at shopping malls, football matches etc.

Trust me, they are just mountains and mountains of brand spanking new
unsold cars. There is no real reason why you should be driving an old
clunker now is there?

Also the domino affect would be catastrophic as steel
manufactures would not sell their steel. All the tens of thousands of
places where car components are made would also be effected, indeed the
world could come to a grinding halt.

Tens of thousands of cars are still
being made every week but hardly any of them are being sold.
Nearly every household in developed countries already has a car or even
two or three cars parked up on their driveway as it is.

Below is an image of thousands upon
thousands of unsold Peugeot cars parked up on a runway near St Petersburg in
Russia.

They are all imported from Europe, they are then
parked up and they are then left to rot. Consequently, the airport
is now unusable for its original purpose.

But I am told this is normal, and that
I must stop spreading panic, fear and lies. Well I can't see anything
but thousands of cars that are not at dealerships but are parked up on a
runway instead!

The cycle
of buying, using, buying using has been broken, it is now just a case of
"using" with not much buying.

Please note that wealthy people are
still buying McLaren, Zonda, BMW, Ferrari, Porsche, Mercedes, Maybach,
Rolls-Royce etc in fact sales have shot up 80% in the last few years.

But when we are talking about the working class and cars for like 10,
15, 20 and 25 grand the story is different...very different.

Below is an image of a just small
section of the thousands of
unsold cars parked up on an disused U.S airbase at Upper Heyford, Bicester, Oxfordshire.

If you think its all a load of
bull then please explain why they are parked up at a damn airbase for
and not at the dealerships? These photos may be months old but
they are still there!

Please don't email me (anymore) to say "its normal
Vince its normal" How is this normal?

I was emailed by a guy (May 2014) who
lives locally to the airbase and he states that they are all still
there. They are seriously running out of space to store these cars.
Again use Google Maps to check it out, they are all down the runway and
in the taxi lanes etc.

I am aware that Google refresh most of
their map photos every 6 months or so too. There is usually a date at
the bottom of the map page on Google Maps itself.

The Upper Heyford area
says "Imagery 2014" These Google Map images are not years
old as some have emailed me to say they are. Check it out!

It is a sorry state of affairs and
there is no answer to it, solutions don't exist. So the cars just
keep on being manufactured and keep on adding to the millions of unsold
cars already sitting redundant around the world.

Below are parked tens of thousands of
cars at Royal Portbury Docks, Avonmouth, near Bristol in the United
Kingdom. If you look on Google Maps and scan around the area at say
200ft you will see nothing but parked up unsold cars.

They are
absolutely everywhere in that area practically every open space has
unsold cars parked up on it.

As it is, there
are more cars than there are people on the planet with an estimated 10
billion roadworthy cars in the world today.

We literally cannot
make enough of them. Below are seen just a few of the thousands of
Citroen's parked up at Corby, Northamptonshire in England. They are being added to daily,
imported from France but with nowhere else to go once they arrive.

So there they sit, brand spanking new
cars, all with a couple of miles on the clock that was consummate with
them being driven to their car parks.

All around the world these cars just
keep on piling up, there is no end in sight. The economy shouts
out quite loud that nobody has the money anymore to spend on a new car.

The reason being that they are making their "old" cars go on a lot
longer. But we cannot stop making them, soon we will run out of
space to park them. We are nearly running out of space to drive
them that's for sure!

Below, more cars mount up in the port of
Valencia in Spain. They will not be exported as there is nowhere for
them to go, so they just sit and rot in their colorful droves.

Gone are the days when the family
would have a new car every year, they are now keeping what they have
got. It may be fair to say that some families still
get a new car every year but its the majority that now do not.

The
results are in these images, hundreds of thousands if not millions of
cars around the world are driven from their factories, parked up and
left.

Could we say that these cars have been
left to rot! Maybe, as these cars will certainly rot if they are
not bought, driven and cared for.

It does not look like they will
be sold any day soon, many of them have been standing for over 12 months
or even longer and this is detrimental to the car.

Someone emailed me to say they are
never left standing for longer than a couple of weeks and that the whole
webpage is a lie...

Below is an image of some brand new Rover 75s parked
up in a warehouse in China...better get your duster out!

The Rover car plant in the U.K folded
a few years ago, so how long have they been sitting there?

Below, as far as the eye can see,
right into the background, cars, cars and more cars. But what's beyond
the horizon? Have a guess...yes that's right...even more cars!

Do you think they will ever start
giving them away, that may be the only radical solution. Who
knows, you could soon be getting a free car with every packet of
cornflakes.

When a car is left standing idle for a
couple of months or longer, all
the oil sinks to the bottom of the sump, and then corrosion begins to
set in on all the internal engine parts where the oil has drained away.

Cold corrosion is when condensation builds up in the cylinders and rust
forms in the bores. The engines would then start to seize and would need
to be professionally freed before they could be started. Also the batteries start to go flat, indeed the
detrimental list
goes on and on.

So the longer they sit there the worse
it slowly becomes for them. What is the answer to this? Well they need
to be sold and that just isn't happening in the normal numbers..

The epidemic is not improving, it is
getting worse. Car manufacturers are constantly coming out with
new models with the latest technology in them. Hence prospective
buyers of, for example, a new Citroen Xsara Picasso want the latest
model, not last years model.

Hence all the unsold Citroen Xsara
Picasso cars from the previous year will now have even lesser chance of
being sold.

The problems then just keep on
mounting up. In the end, the unsold cars that are say 2 years old
will have no alternative but to be either crushed up, dismantled and/or
their parts recycled.

Some car manufacturers moved their
production over to China, General Motors and Cadillac are examples of
this. They are then shipped over in containers and unloaded at
ports.

However they are now being told to put a big halt in their
import into the U.S.A. as they just can't sell them in the quantities
they would desire. Consequently Chinese car parks are now filling
up with brand new American cars.

Well nobody in China can afford
them on their meagre pittance wages, so there they will stay until our
economy improves...which it might do in a few generations.